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The Cat Came Back

Page 1

by Louise Clark




  The Cat Came Back

  The 9 Lives Cozy Mystery Series

  Book One

  by

  Louise Clark

  Published by ePublishing Works!

  www.epublishingworks.com

  ISBN: 978-1-61417-857-6

  By payment of required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this eBook. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented without the express written permission of copyright owner.

  Please Note

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  The reverse engineering, uploading, and/or distributing of this eBook via the internet or via any other means without the permission of the copyright owner is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author's rights is appreciated.

  Copyright © 2016 by Louise Clark. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.

  Cover and eBook design by eBook Prep www.ebookprep.com

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Meet the Author

  Chapter 1

  "I have to throw that out too?" That was a stuffed kangaroo sent to Noelle all the way from Australia.

  "We aren't throwing anything out. We're giving the toys you've outgrown to a charity," Christy Jamieson said patiently. Since she and her daughter were moving from a big house to a very small one, everything had to be assessed before it went into one of the 'keeper' boxes. There just wasn't enough room for all the material goods that had been part of their lives in the rambling mansion.

  The kangaroo was one of dozens of stuffies that Noelle hadn't played with for a year or more. Convincing her daughter to give up each toy, no matter how ignored, was a struggle. So far there were more toys in the 'donate' box than in the 'keeper' box, so Christy was winning out. She wasn't sure how much longer her run of luck would continue.

  Noelle picked up the kangaroo. "Gerry gave it to me."

  He had indeed. Christy could remember when the courier had delivered the small, red-brown stuffie. Frank, her husband and—if she could ever find him—soon to be ex, had looked at it, then commented that Gerry Fisher had probably written it off as an expense against the Jamieson Trust. Christy didn't believe that for an instant. She knew there had been conflict between Gerry and Frank through the years, but she'd always considered Gerry the best of the close-knit group who ran the Jamieson Trust.

  "If you want to keep it, put it in the packing box. Remember, you're only allowed two big boxes. We're moving to a townhouse, so there's a lot less storage than there is here."

  Christy rubbed the back of her neck. The afternoon was unusually hot and humid for Vancouver, British Columbia. The trustees had demanded Christy cut the air conditioning as a cost saving measure, so the windows were open to catch a breeze. So far, all they'd let in was more heavy, humid air. She wished it would rain and let the temperature return to more normal levels.

  Noelle stared at the kangaroo. "I don't see why we have to move."

  "This house has been sold, and we had to find a smaller place to live," Christy said. She could hear the edge in her voice, but this was the twentieth time Noelle had asked the question in the last fifteen minutes. She thought she was doing a pretty good job keeping her patience.

  "I don't want to move!"

  "I know that, honey."

  Noelle took one last, scowling look at the kangaroo, then threw it into the donations box.

  Christy breathed a sigh of relief. Noelle was acting out, angry at the absence of the father she adored and grieving the loss of Stormy the Cat, the family pet who had not returned since the night he'd walked out of the house behind Frank. Her everyday world was changing too. With the house sold and the liquid assets of the trust gone, the trustees were finding jobs for the servants. Maria Elena, the nanny Noelle known since birth, had headed off to a new job in Calgary. Yesterday had been the last day for their housekeeper, Mrs. Grimes. With important adults disappearing from her life, it was no wonder that Noelle was clinging to objects with the least little symbolic meaning.

  Noelle went over to a floating wall shelf opposite her bed. She reached up and grabbed the soft baby doll that held pride of place there. "I suppose you want me to throw out this too!" She added a disgruntled look of scrunched up eyes and a sour smirk for impact.

  Christy stared at the shapeless doll in her daughter's hand. Frank had given it to Noelle on her third birthday. It had been her favorite toy for years, until Frank started being absent more and more often. Then she had put it up in a special spot where it was safe and she could see it. "No, of course not, Noelle! Look, kiddo, you keep the important things and give away the stuff that doesn't matter."

  "Yeah, right," Noelle muttered as she turned away.

  Christy sighed as her daughter carefully placed the doll into the 'keeper' box. The last few months had been hard. When news got out that Frank had flown off to Mexico with a big chunk of the assets of the Jamieson Trust, the Vancouver media had descended on the mansion like a cloud of locusts. Christy hated being the focus of all the attention. Though the staff had fielded the phone calls, Christy was grateful when Gerry Fisher advised her the Trust would handle the media.

  Even so, she was still surrounded by photographers and reporters every time she left the protection of the mansion's gates. At first she was hopeful that interest would fade quickly, but throughout June and into July the case took on new twists and turns. The media was delighted. Frank Jamieson's disappearance and the troubles at the Jamieson Trust became a staple.

  Altogether, it had been a tough summer for her and Noelle. And it was not looking as if the fall would be much better.

  For a time Christy and Noelle worked together in silence. Christy sorted through a pile of clothes Noelle had outgrown, saving more than she put into the donations box, while Noelle did something similar with her smaller toys.

  "Mom! What are you doing with my school uniform?"

  "You aren't going to need it anymore and it barely fits. If you were still going to be attending VRA I'd keep it, but since you're not..."

  "I could still use it."

  "Noelle, it's a gray skirt, a navy blue sweater, and a white shirt. It's a uniform. It looks like a uniform. Why would you want to keep it?"

  Noelle's eyes filled and her lower lip quivered. "I won't be able to see my friends anymore."

  "Oh, kiddo, come have a hug." As she wrapped her snif
fling daughter in her arms, Christy cursed her wandering husband. Not only had Frank stolen away the liquid assets of the Jamieson Trust, but he'd also sold their home for a fraction of its real worth and left hefty debts behind him that the Trust had been obligated to pay by selling core assets like shares in Jamieson Ice Cream.

  Since the Trust was required to provide for the heir and his family, some kind of accommodation had to be found for Christy and Noelle. To protect what was left of the Jamieson stock, the decision had been made to buy a townhouse in the suburbs. Noelle would go to the local public school. Vancouver Royal Academy, the pricy private institution she had attended since pre-school, and the place where all of her friends also went, was no longer an option.

  "We'll take your uniform," Christy muttered over her daughter's head as she hugged her tight. "We'll take anything you want to. Oh, baby, don't cry."

  Noelle cried harder.

  Christy rocked her, making soothing sounds that didn't do a lot of good. Her daughter's tears tore at her soul. Noelle was Christy's life, her reason for being, but like Noelle, she was facing a painful restructuring. The fat allowance that came from the fruitful Jamieson Trust each quarter was now little more than a small stipend. Christy knew that once she was certain Noelle was settled in their new life, she was going to have to get a job if she wanted to give her daughter more than the basics of life. That meant she'd be gone all day and would need after school daycare, since they could no longer afford a nanny. She'd be new in the job, so she wouldn't be available to participate in class field trips or help out in the classroom as she had at VRA.

  And what kind of job could she get with no university degree and the reputation of being a society woman who had helped her husband embezzle his trust fund?

  She wasn't going to think about how the media had played up the rumor that she'd been the one to arrange to have the trust's liquid assets transferred to a bank account in Indonesia, an account in her name only. She still got angry about the way the media had made her the public face of everything that had gone wrong at the Jamieson Trust.

  Christy's cell rang. Still holding a sniffling Noelle, she pulled it out of the pocket of her shorts and checked the screen. "The guy from the auction house is at the door, Noelle. I've got to go let him in."

  Still sniffling, Noelle pulled out of Christy's arms. She rubbed the tears out of her eyes and dried her cheeks as she settled glumly in front of her box. She was a Jamieson, after all, and Jamiesons didn't show their emotions when outsiders were around.

  Christy headed downstairs. The Trust wanted to auction off all of the household furnishings that Christy wasn't taking with her to the townhouse. The appraiser was coming to start the process. With the staff gone, from the security people to Mrs. Grimes, the housekeeper, Christy was now opening her own front door for the first time in years.

  She ran down the broad curving staircase and crossed the golden travertine marble tiles in the front hall, then peeked out one of the glass panels that flanked the mahogany double doors. The man waiting on the porch was wearing a dark suit, white shirt, and a silk tie the blue of a cloudless Vancouver sky. His black leather shoes had a high shine, and his thick, black hair was carefully combed. Reassured this was the appraiser, and not a scruffy reporter, Christy opened the door.

  "Good afternoon." She smiled politely. His job might be sanctioned by the Trust, but she didn't like what he was going to be doing in her house, and she didn't have to be friendly while he was at it.

  His gray eyes assessed her thoughtfully. "I'd like to speak to Christy Jamieson. Is she at home?"

  She frowned. What kind of question was that? She had an appointment with this guy. "You know the answer to that."

  The gray eyes lit with a sudden spark that shot right through her. "You're Christy Jamieson, aren't you? I didn't recognize you at first."

  Not surprising, since she'd cut off her long, golden hair and died it back to her original red-brown color in an act of defiance and despair when confirmation had come through that the mansion had been sold. She looked into those way-too-perceptive eyes, which she noticed were fringed with thick black lashes that most women would kill for. She'd expected the appraiser to be impersonal, almost clinical. This guy wasn't.

  Time to show him she didn't intend to be bullied, even if it was the Trust, and not her, who had arranged the contract with the auction house. "I'd like to see your ID," she said coolly.

  He reached in his hip pocket, pulling his jacket open and showing that the crisp, white shirt fit very nicely over his broad chest. Once he had his wallet free, he dug out a business card.

  Her stomach sank to her knees and her mouth flattened into a hard line as she read the card. "You're a reporter." For form, she added, "How did you get on to the grounds?"

  "Your gate was open," he said, raising arched, black brows.

  Very aware that Noelle could erupt from her room at any moment to see what was going on, she stepped out onto the porch with the reporter. As she shut the door behind her, he scrutinized her in a way that told her he would analyze every word. How was she going to get rid of him?

  She lifted her chin and tried for haughty. "My security people will hear about this!"

  He smiled faintly, not in the least intimidated. "You ought to can the head guy." He nodded in an amiable way, as if he discussed hiring and firing servants every day. "If you haven't already."

  Haughty had never worked for her and now this reporter—she glanced at his card and read Quinn Armstrong—had caught her out. She swallowed hard and hoped Armstrong wouldn't notice the note of desperation in her voice. "What are you talking about?"

  Quinn Armstrong shrugged. His gray eyes assessed her. Christy felt as if he was digging through her thoughts, sifting the rubble, looking for a rich nugget of truth. "It's no secret that this estate has been sold. Or that your husband has been playing fast and loose with his trust fund, victimizing you in the process. I'm guessing that you've come down on hard times, Mrs. Jamieson."

  This man was dangerous. "I have no comment to make. Please leave." She stepped back, put her hand on the door handle, ready to slip inside then slam the door in his face—as she should have done in the first place.

  "I'm a journalist, not a reporter, Mrs. Jamieson. I'm writing a series of articles on the heirs of the establishment. I want to profile Frank Jamieson's case, and I want my readers to be clear about your part in it."

  Christy stared at him, this man who was as good-looking as an angel, but who represented the devil to her. "I don't talk to the press."

  "I would like an interview. An exclusive—the Christy Jamieson story."

  "No."

  He nodded at the card in her hand. "Think about it. I can help you, if you'll let me."

  She looked down at the business card. She would never give Quinn Armstrong an interview. "No."

  "I'll call you tomorrow to see if you've changed your mind."

  He'd pester her, he was a reporter. They never let go. He'd be after her until he wore her down and she finally agreed to an interview. Then he'd promise not to print anything she wouldn't like so he could coax out all her secrets. The article, when it was written, would twist every word she'd said. She wasn't just being paranoid, or absurdly private. It had happened to her before.

  "No, don't call. It would be pointless, a waste of time." He raised black brows and she hurried on, explaining herself when she didn't have to. "I have family visiting, and I'll be showing them the sights. Call me in three weeks."

  She held her breath while he considered this outright lie.

  Finally, he nodded. "Okay, Mrs. Jamieson. I'll be back on September ninth. We'll do the interview then."

  She nodded, then watched as he climbed back into his practical subcompact car.

  On September ninth she'd have moved from this fine, old house into her neat, little Burnaby townhouse. She hoped he wouldn't be rude to the new owners.

  * * *

  Quinn Armstrong backed, then turned the ca
r, aware of Christy Jamieson's eyes on him. He smiled cynically. Who did she think she was fooling? Call her in three weeks and she'd give him the interview. Yeah, sure.

  At the end of the drive he paused before turning left. She might have been telling the truth about family visiting. It was August after all, prime tourist time in British Columbia, but the bit about showing family the sights was way out there. In Quinn's experience, you couldn't sightsee for more than half a day before burnout happened. Christy Jamieson had plenty of time to give him an interview—if she wanted to.

  Which she didn't.

  The Jamieson mansion was located on a quiet, treed circle in the heart of Vancouver's west side. Traffic was light, but it did exist. While Quinn waited for a solitary car to pass, he pulled off his tie and loosened the top button of his shirt. The car slid past. With the road clear he made a left off the mansion's grounds.

  He'd give Christy a couple of weeks, then he'd be back at her door. In the meantime, he would use the time to do more research on her.

  He accelerated out of his turn. Christy Jamieson was not what he'd expected. When reading the published material on her, he'd formed an impression of a beautiful, self-absorbed woman who had married money for money's sake. The accompanying photographs showed a woman groomed to the point of perfection, the kind who froze out everyone but the best social contacts. Yet the woman who answered the door wore wrinkled shorts that showed a lot of leg and a T-shirt that hugged her breasts and was faded from the wash, hardly the costume of an avid, social-climbing bimbo. Not that she didn't look great, she did, but—

  A gray animal with black stripes burst from the hedging bordering the property on Quinn's side of the road. From the sounds of deep-throated barking coming from behind the bushes, the creature—a cat—was probably being chased by a very large dog.

 

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